CA2367056C - Improvements relating to rotary piston machines - Google Patents
Improvements relating to rotary piston machines Download PDFInfo
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- CA2367056C CA2367056C CA002367056A CA2367056A CA2367056C CA 2367056 C CA2367056 C CA 2367056C CA 002367056 A CA002367056 A CA 002367056A CA 2367056 A CA2367056 A CA 2367056A CA 2367056 C CA2367056 C CA 2367056C
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F01—MACHINES OR ENGINES IN GENERAL; ENGINE PLANTS IN GENERAL; STEAM ENGINES
- F01C—ROTARY-PISTON OR OSCILLATING-PISTON MACHINES OR ENGINES
- F01C11/00—Combinations of two or more machines or engines, each being of rotary-piston or oscillating-piston type
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F02—COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
- F02G—HOT GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT ENGINE PLANTS; USE OF WASTE HEAT OF COMBUSTION ENGINES; NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- F02G1/00—Hot gas positive-displacement engine plants
- F02G1/04—Hot gas positive-displacement engine plants of closed-cycle type
- F02G1/043—Hot gas positive-displacement engine plants of closed-cycle type the engine being operated by expansion and contraction of a mass of working gas which is heated and cooled in one of a plurality of constantly communicating expansible chambers, e.g. Stirling cycle type engines
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F01—MACHINES OR ENGINES IN GENERAL; ENGINE PLANTS IN GENERAL; STEAM ENGINES
- F01C—ROTARY-PISTON OR OSCILLATING-PISTON MACHINES OR ENGINES
- F01C11/00—Combinations of two or more machines or engines, each being of rotary-piston or oscillating-piston type
- F01C11/002—Combinations of two or more machines or engines, each being of rotary-piston or oscillating-piston type of similar working principle
- F01C11/004—Combinations of two or more machines or engines, each being of rotary-piston or oscillating-piston type of similar working principle and of complementary function, e.g. internal combustion engine with supercharger
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F02—COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
- F02B—INTERNAL-COMBUSTION PISTON ENGINES; COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL
- F02B53/00—Internal-combustion aspects of rotary-piston or oscillating-piston engines
- F02B2053/005—Wankel engines
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F02—COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
- F02B—INTERNAL-COMBUSTION PISTON ENGINES; COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL
- F02B53/00—Internal-combustion aspects of rotary-piston or oscillating-piston engines
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
- Compressors, Vaccum Pumps And Other Relevant Systems (AREA)
- Applications Or Details Of Rotary Compressors (AREA)
- Engine Equipment That Uses Special Cycles (AREA)
- Centrifugal Separators (AREA)
- Polarising Elements (AREA)
- Reciprocating Pumps (AREA)
- Electromagnetic Pumps, Or The Like (AREA)
Abstract
A rotary piston machine adapts the Stirling principle and can operate as an engine or a heat pump. Two variable volume units (1, 4) have n-lobed chambers (3, 6) rotatable about a common axis at a first speed.
Each chamber contains an (n+l) sided piston (2, 5), these being rotatable about a different common axis at a different second speed, and cooperating with the lobes to form expanding and reducing sub-chambers. The first to second speed ratio is (n+1):n ducts (10, 11) incorporating regenerators provide intercommunication between the chambers (3, 6) and are open and closed by the relative piston rotation to exchange fluid or vapor between units. Heating may be provided for one unit, the expansion unit (1), and cooling for the other, the compression unit (4), and the ducts can also incorporate heating and cooling means.
Each chamber contains an (n+l) sided piston (2, 5), these being rotatable about a different common axis at a different second speed, and cooperating with the lobes to form expanding and reducing sub-chambers. The first to second speed ratio is (n+1):n ducts (10, 11) incorporating regenerators provide intercommunication between the chambers (3, 6) and are open and closed by the relative piston rotation to exchange fluid or vapor between units. Heating may be provided for one unit, the expansion unit (1), and cooling for the other, the compression unit (4), and the ducts can also incorporate heating and cooling means.
Description
Improvements relating to Rotary Piston Machiiies This invention relates to rotary piston machines. It is concerned with an adaptation of the Stirling principle, with multi-sided rotary pistons operating in chambers with epitrochoidal lobes, the working fluid or vapour undergoing closed thermodynamic cyclic processes. The machine may operate as an engine or as a heat pump.
According to the present invention there is provided a fluid or vapour rotary piston machine including two variable-volume units, each unit having a rotary mu'-ti-lobed epitrochoidal chamber and a multi-sided rotary piston therein forming a plurality of invididual sub-chambers by its co-operation with the periphery of the associated chamber, the number (n+l) of piston sides being greater by one than the number (n) of epitroichoid arcs, wherein the two chambers are constrained to rotate at a first common speed about a first effective common axis while the two pistons are constrained to rotate at a second common speed about a second effective common axis, the ratio of first to second common speeds being n+l:n, wherein each chamber has a plurality (n) of dual-function ports enabling connection between the chambers via ducts, and wherein said ducts each contain a regenerator, enabling one variable-volume unit to perform intake, expansion and exhaust, while the other unit performs intake, compression and exhaust, as a result of the relative rotation and port positions.
Preferably, the chambers will be co-axial, as will be the rotors. That simplifies construction. But they could, in theory, be on different axes but coupled to rotate in liaison. The term "effective" is intended to cover this alternative.
Heating means may be provided for the variable-volume unit which performs the expansior_processes, and there could be further heating means between each said regenerator and the variable-volume unit which performs the expansion processes.
Cooling means may also be provided for the variable-volume unit which performs the compression processes, and there could be further cooling means between each said regenerator and the variable-volume unit which performs the compression processes.
In the preferred form n=2, so that there are three sided pistons operating in double-lobed chambers.
The expansion unit which may, but not necessarily, be heated, will have its ports disposed in such a way that the chambers formed therein are increasing in volume generally when not in communication with a port and decreasing in volume generally when said chambers are in communication with a port. The other, compression unit which may, but not necessarily, be cooled, will have its ports disposed in such a way that the chambers formed therein are decreasing in volume generally when not in communication with a port, and increasing in volume generally when said chambers are in communication with a port. Work processes thus occur in chambers isolated from port openings, while the transfer of working fluid or vapour occurs between a pair of chambers each in communication with ports opening to a common duct.
If high-grade heat transfer is accomplished to the working fluid or vapour flowing to, from or contained within, the expansion unit, while low-grade heat transfer is accomplished from the working fluid or vapour flowing to, from, or contained within, the compression unit, the machine behaves as an engine, with mechanical work output. If mechanical work is applied to the rotating components, but low-grade heat transfer is accomplished to the region of the expansion unit while high-grade heat transfer occurs from the region of the compression unit, the machine behaves as a heat pump or refrigerating machine.
For a better understanding of the invention, reference will now be made by way of example, to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figures 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 are schematic diagrams showing the relative positions of expansion and compression units of a rotary piston machine at intervals during a cycle of rotation, and Figure 6 is a diagrammatic cross-section through a preferred embodiment of the machine.
An expansion unit 1 has a rotary piston 2 contained in a chamber 3 and a compression unit 4 has a rotary piston 5 contained in a chamber 6. Each piston 2 and 5 is of flat, generally equilateral triangular form, but with the sides of the triangle convex and arcuate. Each chamber 3 and 6 is also flat, closely to confine the faces of the piston, and is of two-lobed epitrochoidal form. The chambers thus have major and minor axes intersecting at right angles at their centres. The two units 1 and 4 are rigidly linked to rotate about a common axis through their centres in the same direction and at the same speed, the major axes of the chambers 3 and 6 being at 900 to each other. The two rotary pistons 2 and 5 are also rigidly linked to rotate about a common axis through their centres in the same direction and at the same speed, this being two thirds the speed of rotation of the chambers 3 and 6. The arcuate sides 2a, 2b and 2c of the piston 2 are disposed at 180 to the counterpart sides 5a, 5b and 5c of the other piston 5. The sides of the pistons 2 and 5 co-operate with the profiles of the respective chambers 3 and 6 to form sub-chambers 3a, 3b and 3c and 6a, 6b and 6c, of variable volume and shape in operation, as described below.
Ports 7 and 8 in the expansion unit 1 are diagonally opposite each other and offset 30 in the direction of motion (clockwise as seen in Figures 1 to 5) from the minor axis of the chamber 3. Corresponding ports 9 and 10 are similarly disposed in the compression unit 4, but are offset by 30 in the direction opposite that of rotation from the minor axis of the chamber 6. This positioning ensures that during operation a port, 7 or 8,..is about to open to a sub-chamber when that sub-chamber is at maximum volume in the expansion unit 1. Similarly, a port, 9 or 10, has just closed to a sub-chamber when that sub-chamber is at maximum volume in the compression unit 4. The expansion unit port 7 is linked by an interconnecting duct 11 to the compression port 9 diagonally opposite with reference to the axis of rotation of the units 1 and 4, while the expansion unit port 8 is similarly linked by an interconnecting duct 12 to the compression unit port 10. These ducts each contain a 5 regenerator (not shown).
The sequence of operation is as follows:
In Figure 1, heated working fluid or vapour occupies the sub-chamber 3a, which is at minimum volume and is open, via the port 8, to the duct 12. The sub-chamber 3b is isolated and increasing in volume. The sub-chamber 3c is decreasing in volume, thereby expelling working fluid or vapour via the port 7, through the duct 11. The fluid or vapour is giving up, in the case of an engine, or taking up, in the case of a heat pump, heat within the regenerator in that duct 11. Cooled working fluid or vapour occupies the chamber 6a which is at maximum volume, isolated, and about to start its compression cycle. The sub-chamber 6b is in its compression cycle, is decreasing in volume and isolated.
The sub-chamber 6c is increasing in volume and is open, via the port 9, to the duct 11. It is therefore receiving the working fluid or vapour from the sub-chamber 3c. The port 10 is closed by the piston 5.
In Figure 2 the pistons 2 and 5 have rotated clockwise by 30 and the chambers 3 and 6 by 45 . The sub-chamber 3a is increasing in volume and accepting working fluid or vapour, via the port 8, from the duct 12 and from the sub-chamber 6b, which continues to decrease in volume and now communicates with the port 10. The sub-chamber 3b continues to increase in volume, with the isolated heated working fluid or vapour therein being expanded, while the transfer of working fluid or vapour continues from the sub-chamber 3c to the sub-chamber 6c via the port 7, the duct 11, and the port 9. The cooled working fluid or vapour in the sub-chamber 6a remains isolated and is compressed as the volume of that sub-chamber decreases.
In Figure 3 the pistons have rotated through 600 from their initial positions and the chambers by 900. The sub-chamber 3a continues to increase in.volume, but the piston 2 closes the port 8, thereby terminating the ingress of working fluid or vapour, whereupon the expansion process commences within that sub-chamber. The sub-chamber 3b has attained its maximum volume, and the heated working fluid therein has reached the end of its expansion process, while the sub-chamber 3c continues to decrease in volume with the egress of working fluid or vapour, via the port 7, the duct 11 and the port 9 to the compression unit 4. The cooled working fluid continues to be compressed in the isolated sub-chamber 6a as the volume therein decreases. The sub-chamber 6b is at minimum volume and open, via the port 10, to the duct 12, but the working f luid or vapour ceases to flow due to the closure of the port B. The sub-chamber 6c continues to increase in volume and to accept the working fluid or vapour, via the port 9, from the sub-chamber 3c.
In Figure 4 the pistons 2 and 5 have moved on another and the chambers 3 and 6 another 45 . The sub-chamber 3a is isolated and increasing in volume, with the heated working fluid therein continuing its expansion process. The sub-chamber 3b now communicates with the port 8 as that is uncovered by the piston 2 and, since that sub-chamber is decreasing in volume, the working fluid or vapour therein is forced out into the duct 12. The sub-chamber 3c continues to decrease in volume, and transfer of working fluid or vapour, via the port 7, the duct 11 and the port 9, continues to the compression unit 4. The sub-chamber 6a remains isolated and decreasing in volume, with the cooled working fluid or vapour therein continuing its compression process. The sub-chamber 6b is now increasing in volume and, due to its communication with the port 10, accepts the working fluid or vapour from the sub-chamber 3b via the duct 12. The sub-chamber 6c continues to increase in volume and the ingress of working fluid or vapour continues, via the port 9 and the duct 11, from the expansion unit 1.
In Figure 5 the pistons are 120 from their original positions and the chambers 180 from theirs. The sub-chamber 3a continues to increase in volume, with the heated, isolated working fluid therein continuing its expansion process. The sub-chamber 3b continues to decrease in volume, with its working fluid or vapour passing via the port 8, the duct 12, and the port 10 to the sub-chamber 6b which is increasing in volume. The sub-chamber 3c is at minimum volume and open, via port 7, to the duct 11, but the compression unit piston 5 has closed the port 9, and so the working fluid or vapour ceases to flow. The sub-chamber 6a is still isolated and decreasing in volume, with the cooled working fluid therein at the end of its compression process.
The sub-chamber 6b continues to accept the transferred working fluid or vapour from the expansion unit 1. The sub-chamber 6c, now isolated due to the closure of the port 9, is at maximum volume with the working fluid or vapour therein at the commencement of its compression process. The situation within the machine is now similar to that of Figure 1, although the various bodies of working fluid or vapour occupy different spaces to those in the earlier diagram.
Consider the body of cooled working fluid in the sub-chamber 6a in Figure 1 at the commencement of its compression process. As the units 1 and 4 rotate through 1800 and the rotary pistons 2 and 5 rotate through 120 , the relative rotor rotation will be 60 in the opposite direction. This finds the body of fluid in sub-chamber 6a at the end of its compression process in a similar situation to that of the cooled working fluid or vapour in the sub-chamber 6b in Figure 1. After a further 30 of relative rotor rotation (corresponding to the Figure 3 positions) the sub-chamber 6a will be at minimum volume, and the major proportion of the working fluid or vapour that was therein will have transferred to the sub-chamber 3c via the port 9, the ducts 11 and the port 7, absorbing, in the case of an engine, or rejecting, in the case of a heat pump, heat during its passage through duct 11. At this point, where the total relative rotor rotation is 90 , the piston 2 will have passed the port 7. The expander sub-chamber 3c allows expansion of the heated working fluid or vapour therein until a further 60 of relative rotor rotation has occurred (making the total 150 ), when the sub-chamber 3c is at maximum volume. Further rotation uncovers the port 8, allowing egress of heated working fluid or vapour via the duct 12, in which it is cooled in the case of an engine, or heated in the case of a heat pump. It then enters the sub-chamber 6c via the port 10, this transfer process occurring over a further 90 of relative rotor rotation, the total then being 240 , when the sub-chamber 3c will be at minimum volume. The piston 5 now covers port 10 and the thermodynamic cycle involving this particular body of working fluid or vapour is repeated.
The processes may be tabulated over 360 of relative rotor rotation, corresponding to 720 of piston rotation and 10800 of chamber rotation, as set out below in Table 1.
The closed thermodynamic cycle described above occurs and repeats, with phase displacement, with four main bodies of working fluid or vapour. In Figure 1, these are located in sub-chamber 6a at the commencement of compression, in sub-chamber 6b towards the end of compression, in sub-chambers 3c and 6c and duct 11 undergoing regenerative transfer, and in sub-chamber 3b undergoing expansion. The residual working fluid or vapour in sub-chamber 3a is awaiting mixing with the main body of working fluid or vapour in the sub-chamber 6b. It will be noted that work processes in both the expansion and compression units are of equal duration, namely 60 of relative rotor rotation.
Working fluid or vapour regenerative transfer from the compression unit 4 to the expansion unit 1 is always to a sub-chamber of dissimilar designation, that is, 6a to 3c, 6b to 3a and 6c to 3b, and is of short duration, namely 301 of 5 relative rotor rotation. Working fluid or vapour regeneration transfer from the expansion unit 1 to the compression unit 4 is always to a sub-chamber of similar designation, that is, 3a to 6a, 3b to 6b and 3c to 6c, and is of long duration, namely 90 of relative rotor rotation.
According to the present invention there is provided a fluid or vapour rotary piston machine including two variable-volume units, each unit having a rotary mu'-ti-lobed epitrochoidal chamber and a multi-sided rotary piston therein forming a plurality of invididual sub-chambers by its co-operation with the periphery of the associated chamber, the number (n+l) of piston sides being greater by one than the number (n) of epitroichoid arcs, wherein the two chambers are constrained to rotate at a first common speed about a first effective common axis while the two pistons are constrained to rotate at a second common speed about a second effective common axis, the ratio of first to second common speeds being n+l:n, wherein each chamber has a plurality (n) of dual-function ports enabling connection between the chambers via ducts, and wherein said ducts each contain a regenerator, enabling one variable-volume unit to perform intake, expansion and exhaust, while the other unit performs intake, compression and exhaust, as a result of the relative rotation and port positions.
Preferably, the chambers will be co-axial, as will be the rotors. That simplifies construction. But they could, in theory, be on different axes but coupled to rotate in liaison. The term "effective" is intended to cover this alternative.
Heating means may be provided for the variable-volume unit which performs the expansior_processes, and there could be further heating means between each said regenerator and the variable-volume unit which performs the expansion processes.
Cooling means may also be provided for the variable-volume unit which performs the compression processes, and there could be further cooling means between each said regenerator and the variable-volume unit which performs the compression processes.
In the preferred form n=2, so that there are three sided pistons operating in double-lobed chambers.
The expansion unit which may, but not necessarily, be heated, will have its ports disposed in such a way that the chambers formed therein are increasing in volume generally when not in communication with a port and decreasing in volume generally when said chambers are in communication with a port. The other, compression unit which may, but not necessarily, be cooled, will have its ports disposed in such a way that the chambers formed therein are decreasing in volume generally when not in communication with a port, and increasing in volume generally when said chambers are in communication with a port. Work processes thus occur in chambers isolated from port openings, while the transfer of working fluid or vapour occurs between a pair of chambers each in communication with ports opening to a common duct.
If high-grade heat transfer is accomplished to the working fluid or vapour flowing to, from or contained within, the expansion unit, while low-grade heat transfer is accomplished from the working fluid or vapour flowing to, from, or contained within, the compression unit, the machine behaves as an engine, with mechanical work output. If mechanical work is applied to the rotating components, but low-grade heat transfer is accomplished to the region of the expansion unit while high-grade heat transfer occurs from the region of the compression unit, the machine behaves as a heat pump or refrigerating machine.
For a better understanding of the invention, reference will now be made by way of example, to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figures 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 are schematic diagrams showing the relative positions of expansion and compression units of a rotary piston machine at intervals during a cycle of rotation, and Figure 6 is a diagrammatic cross-section through a preferred embodiment of the machine.
An expansion unit 1 has a rotary piston 2 contained in a chamber 3 and a compression unit 4 has a rotary piston 5 contained in a chamber 6. Each piston 2 and 5 is of flat, generally equilateral triangular form, but with the sides of the triangle convex and arcuate. Each chamber 3 and 6 is also flat, closely to confine the faces of the piston, and is of two-lobed epitrochoidal form. The chambers thus have major and minor axes intersecting at right angles at their centres. The two units 1 and 4 are rigidly linked to rotate about a common axis through their centres in the same direction and at the same speed, the major axes of the chambers 3 and 6 being at 900 to each other. The two rotary pistons 2 and 5 are also rigidly linked to rotate about a common axis through their centres in the same direction and at the same speed, this being two thirds the speed of rotation of the chambers 3 and 6. The arcuate sides 2a, 2b and 2c of the piston 2 are disposed at 180 to the counterpart sides 5a, 5b and 5c of the other piston 5. The sides of the pistons 2 and 5 co-operate with the profiles of the respective chambers 3 and 6 to form sub-chambers 3a, 3b and 3c and 6a, 6b and 6c, of variable volume and shape in operation, as described below.
Ports 7 and 8 in the expansion unit 1 are diagonally opposite each other and offset 30 in the direction of motion (clockwise as seen in Figures 1 to 5) from the minor axis of the chamber 3. Corresponding ports 9 and 10 are similarly disposed in the compression unit 4, but are offset by 30 in the direction opposite that of rotation from the minor axis of the chamber 6. This positioning ensures that during operation a port, 7 or 8,..is about to open to a sub-chamber when that sub-chamber is at maximum volume in the expansion unit 1. Similarly, a port, 9 or 10, has just closed to a sub-chamber when that sub-chamber is at maximum volume in the compression unit 4. The expansion unit port 7 is linked by an interconnecting duct 11 to the compression port 9 diagonally opposite with reference to the axis of rotation of the units 1 and 4, while the expansion unit port 8 is similarly linked by an interconnecting duct 12 to the compression unit port 10. These ducts each contain a 5 regenerator (not shown).
The sequence of operation is as follows:
In Figure 1, heated working fluid or vapour occupies the sub-chamber 3a, which is at minimum volume and is open, via the port 8, to the duct 12. The sub-chamber 3b is isolated and increasing in volume. The sub-chamber 3c is decreasing in volume, thereby expelling working fluid or vapour via the port 7, through the duct 11. The fluid or vapour is giving up, in the case of an engine, or taking up, in the case of a heat pump, heat within the regenerator in that duct 11. Cooled working fluid or vapour occupies the chamber 6a which is at maximum volume, isolated, and about to start its compression cycle. The sub-chamber 6b is in its compression cycle, is decreasing in volume and isolated.
The sub-chamber 6c is increasing in volume and is open, via the port 9, to the duct 11. It is therefore receiving the working fluid or vapour from the sub-chamber 3c. The port 10 is closed by the piston 5.
In Figure 2 the pistons 2 and 5 have rotated clockwise by 30 and the chambers 3 and 6 by 45 . The sub-chamber 3a is increasing in volume and accepting working fluid or vapour, via the port 8, from the duct 12 and from the sub-chamber 6b, which continues to decrease in volume and now communicates with the port 10. The sub-chamber 3b continues to increase in volume, with the isolated heated working fluid or vapour therein being expanded, while the transfer of working fluid or vapour continues from the sub-chamber 3c to the sub-chamber 6c via the port 7, the duct 11, and the port 9. The cooled working fluid or vapour in the sub-chamber 6a remains isolated and is compressed as the volume of that sub-chamber decreases.
In Figure 3 the pistons have rotated through 600 from their initial positions and the chambers by 900. The sub-chamber 3a continues to increase in.volume, but the piston 2 closes the port 8, thereby terminating the ingress of working fluid or vapour, whereupon the expansion process commences within that sub-chamber. The sub-chamber 3b has attained its maximum volume, and the heated working fluid therein has reached the end of its expansion process, while the sub-chamber 3c continues to decrease in volume with the egress of working fluid or vapour, via the port 7, the duct 11 and the port 9 to the compression unit 4. The cooled working fluid continues to be compressed in the isolated sub-chamber 6a as the volume therein decreases. The sub-chamber 6b is at minimum volume and open, via the port 10, to the duct 12, but the working f luid or vapour ceases to flow due to the closure of the port B. The sub-chamber 6c continues to increase in volume and to accept the working fluid or vapour, via the port 9, from the sub-chamber 3c.
In Figure 4 the pistons 2 and 5 have moved on another and the chambers 3 and 6 another 45 . The sub-chamber 3a is isolated and increasing in volume, with the heated working fluid therein continuing its expansion process. The sub-chamber 3b now communicates with the port 8 as that is uncovered by the piston 2 and, since that sub-chamber is decreasing in volume, the working fluid or vapour therein is forced out into the duct 12. The sub-chamber 3c continues to decrease in volume, and transfer of working fluid or vapour, via the port 7, the duct 11 and the port 9, continues to the compression unit 4. The sub-chamber 6a remains isolated and decreasing in volume, with the cooled working fluid or vapour therein continuing its compression process. The sub-chamber 6b is now increasing in volume and, due to its communication with the port 10, accepts the working fluid or vapour from the sub-chamber 3b via the duct 12. The sub-chamber 6c continues to increase in volume and the ingress of working fluid or vapour continues, via the port 9 and the duct 11, from the expansion unit 1.
In Figure 5 the pistons are 120 from their original positions and the chambers 180 from theirs. The sub-chamber 3a continues to increase in volume, with the heated, isolated working fluid therein continuing its expansion process. The sub-chamber 3b continues to decrease in volume, with its working fluid or vapour passing via the port 8, the duct 12, and the port 10 to the sub-chamber 6b which is increasing in volume. The sub-chamber 3c is at minimum volume and open, via port 7, to the duct 11, but the compression unit piston 5 has closed the port 9, and so the working fluid or vapour ceases to flow. The sub-chamber 6a is still isolated and decreasing in volume, with the cooled working fluid therein at the end of its compression process.
The sub-chamber 6b continues to accept the transferred working fluid or vapour from the expansion unit 1. The sub-chamber 6c, now isolated due to the closure of the port 9, is at maximum volume with the working fluid or vapour therein at the commencement of its compression process. The situation within the machine is now similar to that of Figure 1, although the various bodies of working fluid or vapour occupy different spaces to those in the earlier diagram.
Consider the body of cooled working fluid in the sub-chamber 6a in Figure 1 at the commencement of its compression process. As the units 1 and 4 rotate through 1800 and the rotary pistons 2 and 5 rotate through 120 , the relative rotor rotation will be 60 in the opposite direction. This finds the body of fluid in sub-chamber 6a at the end of its compression process in a similar situation to that of the cooled working fluid or vapour in the sub-chamber 6b in Figure 1. After a further 30 of relative rotor rotation (corresponding to the Figure 3 positions) the sub-chamber 6a will be at minimum volume, and the major proportion of the working fluid or vapour that was therein will have transferred to the sub-chamber 3c via the port 9, the ducts 11 and the port 7, absorbing, in the case of an engine, or rejecting, in the case of a heat pump, heat during its passage through duct 11. At this point, where the total relative rotor rotation is 90 , the piston 2 will have passed the port 7. The expander sub-chamber 3c allows expansion of the heated working fluid or vapour therein until a further 60 of relative rotor rotation has occurred (making the total 150 ), when the sub-chamber 3c is at maximum volume. Further rotation uncovers the port 8, allowing egress of heated working fluid or vapour via the duct 12, in which it is cooled in the case of an engine, or heated in the case of a heat pump. It then enters the sub-chamber 6c via the port 10, this transfer process occurring over a further 90 of relative rotor rotation, the total then being 240 , when the sub-chamber 3c will be at minimum volume. The piston 5 now covers port 10 and the thermodynamic cycle involving this particular body of working fluid or vapour is repeated.
The processes may be tabulated over 360 of relative rotor rotation, corresponding to 720 of piston rotation and 10800 of chamber rotation, as set out below in Table 1.
The closed thermodynamic cycle described above occurs and repeats, with phase displacement, with four main bodies of working fluid or vapour. In Figure 1, these are located in sub-chamber 6a at the commencement of compression, in sub-chamber 6b towards the end of compression, in sub-chambers 3c and 6c and duct 11 undergoing regenerative transfer, and in sub-chamber 3b undergoing expansion. The residual working fluid or vapour in sub-chamber 3a is awaiting mixing with the main body of working fluid or vapour in the sub-chamber 6b. It will be noted that work processes in both the expansion and compression units are of equal duration, namely 60 of relative rotor rotation.
Working fluid or vapour regenerative transfer from the compression unit 4 to the expansion unit 1 is always to a sub-chamber of dissimilar designation, that is, 6a to 3c, 6b to 3a and 6c to 3b, and is of short duration, namely 301 of 5 relative rotor rotation. Working fluid or vapour regeneration transfer from the expansion unit 1 to the compression unit 4 is always to a sub-chamber of similar designation, that is, 3a to 6a, 3b to 6b and 3c to 6c, and is of long duration, namely 90 of relative rotor rotation.
10 If the units 1 and 4 are of equal size, which is not a necessity, the geometry ensures that this latter transfer occurs under constant summed volume.
The regenerative transfer of any one main body of working fluid or vapour is always accomplished alternately between the two ducts 11 and 12. That is, transfer from one unit to the other via one duct is always followed by the return transfer via the other duct. Because of the pairings of sub-chambers during those transfers, any one main body of working fluid or vapour will eventually be transported through every sub-chamber within the machine, allowing mass and energy balances of the working fluid or vapour to be attained rapidly.
The route followed by one main body of working fluid or vapour may be tabulated over 720 of relative rotor rotation, corresponding to 1440 of piston rotation and 2160 of housing rotation, as shown below in Table 2. The main body of working fluid or vapour under study in that table is that which appears in sub-chamber 6a in Figure 1, at the start of its compression process. It can be seen to undergo three complete thermodynamic cycles before it returns to that sub-chamber 6a, after passing through all the other sub-chambers of the machine. A second main body of working fluid or vapour which appears in sub-chamber 6b in Figure 1, undergoing its expansion process, will follow an identical route to that shown in Table 2, with a phase displacement of +360 relative rotor rotation from that shown in Table 2. A third main body of working fluid or vapour which appears in sub-chamber 6b in Figure 1, towards the end of its compression process, will follow a similar route, but with the ducts interchanged so that expansion unit to the compression unit transfers are made via the duct 11 whilst the reverse transfers are made via the duct 12, with a phase displacement of +180 relative rotor rotation from that shown in Table 2. The fourth main body of working fluid or vapour which appears in sub-chambers 3c and 6c and duct 11 in Figure 1, undergoing regenerative transfer to the compression unit, will follow an identical route to that of the third main body of fluid or vapour, with a phase displacement of -180 relative rotor rotation from that shown in Table 2. The machine therefore provides for a total of twelve thermodynamic cycles over the period defined by 1440 of piston rotation, corresponding to 2160 of chamber rotation and 720 of relative rotor rotation.
It should be noted that each individual thermodynamic cycle occurs over a period defined by 240 of relative rotor rotation, that is, 480 of piston rotation and 720 of chamber rotation. Whichever component, whether the coupled pistons 2 and 5 or the coupled units 1 and 4 is employed as the engine work output medium or heat pump work input medium, the thermodynamic cycles have a longer duration than those occurring in conventional reciprocating heat engines and reciprocating heat pumps. These must, perforce, occur over 3600 of the output, or input, shaft rotation. This feature of the rotary machine described above allows enhanced heat transfer processes, enabling the theoretically ideal thermodynamic cycle to be approached.
In Figure 6, the two units 1 and 4 are rigidly coupled by a hollow shaft 13 journalled at 14 and 15 in a fixed mounting 16. The pistons 2 and 5 are carried by a common shaft 17 journalled at 18 and 19 in the mounting 16. The ports 7, 8, 9 and 10 are in the flat radial sides of the chambers 3 and 6, near their peripheries, and are open and closed by the flat faces of the pistons 2 and 5. A gear coupling 20 between the shafts 13 and 17 ensure that the units 1 and 4 rotate relatively to the pistons 2 and 5 in the manner described.
The units 1 and 4 can be encapsulated or shrouded to distinct upper and lower temperature regions around them, each unit presenting a large surface area for efficient heat transfer. The rotation of those units promotes near-uniform temperature distribution.
In addition to maintaining a temperature differential between the units 1 and 4, there can be additional heating and cooling means for the ducts 11 and 12 provided, for example, by adaptation of the encapsulation or shrouding to enclose the ends of the ducts. Any further heating means will be between the regenerators and the unit 1, while any further cooling means will be between the regenerators and the unit 4.
Figure 6 shows the two rotatable structures isolated, for simplicity. There will of course be a connection to one or the other in order to get work out, in the case of an engine, or to put work in, in the case of a pump. The shafts 13 and 17 can be suitably adapted.
It will be understood that while a simple embodiment with three-sided pistons operating in two-lobed chambers has been described, there could be more elaborate arrangements with n+1(n>2) sided pistons in n-lobed chambers connected by a corresponding number of ducts with regenerators. The relative speeds of rotation of the chambers to the pistons will be n+l:n.
The regenerative transfer of any one main body of working fluid or vapour is always accomplished alternately between the two ducts 11 and 12. That is, transfer from one unit to the other via one duct is always followed by the return transfer via the other duct. Because of the pairings of sub-chambers during those transfers, any one main body of working fluid or vapour will eventually be transported through every sub-chamber within the machine, allowing mass and energy balances of the working fluid or vapour to be attained rapidly.
The route followed by one main body of working fluid or vapour may be tabulated over 720 of relative rotor rotation, corresponding to 1440 of piston rotation and 2160 of housing rotation, as shown below in Table 2. The main body of working fluid or vapour under study in that table is that which appears in sub-chamber 6a in Figure 1, at the start of its compression process. It can be seen to undergo three complete thermodynamic cycles before it returns to that sub-chamber 6a, after passing through all the other sub-chambers of the machine. A second main body of working fluid or vapour which appears in sub-chamber 6b in Figure 1, undergoing its expansion process, will follow an identical route to that shown in Table 2, with a phase displacement of +360 relative rotor rotation from that shown in Table 2. A third main body of working fluid or vapour which appears in sub-chamber 6b in Figure 1, towards the end of its compression process, will follow a similar route, but with the ducts interchanged so that expansion unit to the compression unit transfers are made via the duct 11 whilst the reverse transfers are made via the duct 12, with a phase displacement of +180 relative rotor rotation from that shown in Table 2. The fourth main body of working fluid or vapour which appears in sub-chambers 3c and 6c and duct 11 in Figure 1, undergoing regenerative transfer to the compression unit, will follow an identical route to that of the third main body of fluid or vapour, with a phase displacement of -180 relative rotor rotation from that shown in Table 2. The machine therefore provides for a total of twelve thermodynamic cycles over the period defined by 1440 of piston rotation, corresponding to 2160 of chamber rotation and 720 of relative rotor rotation.
It should be noted that each individual thermodynamic cycle occurs over a period defined by 240 of relative rotor rotation, that is, 480 of piston rotation and 720 of chamber rotation. Whichever component, whether the coupled pistons 2 and 5 or the coupled units 1 and 4 is employed as the engine work output medium or heat pump work input medium, the thermodynamic cycles have a longer duration than those occurring in conventional reciprocating heat engines and reciprocating heat pumps. These must, perforce, occur over 3600 of the output, or input, shaft rotation. This feature of the rotary machine described above allows enhanced heat transfer processes, enabling the theoretically ideal thermodynamic cycle to be approached.
In Figure 6, the two units 1 and 4 are rigidly coupled by a hollow shaft 13 journalled at 14 and 15 in a fixed mounting 16. The pistons 2 and 5 are carried by a common shaft 17 journalled at 18 and 19 in the mounting 16. The ports 7, 8, 9 and 10 are in the flat radial sides of the chambers 3 and 6, near their peripheries, and are open and closed by the flat faces of the pistons 2 and 5. A gear coupling 20 between the shafts 13 and 17 ensure that the units 1 and 4 rotate relatively to the pistons 2 and 5 in the manner described.
The units 1 and 4 can be encapsulated or shrouded to distinct upper and lower temperature regions around them, each unit presenting a large surface area for efficient heat transfer. The rotation of those units promotes near-uniform temperature distribution.
In addition to maintaining a temperature differential between the units 1 and 4, there can be additional heating and cooling means for the ducts 11 and 12 provided, for example, by adaptation of the encapsulation or shrouding to enclose the ends of the ducts. Any further heating means will be between the regenerators and the unit 1, while any further cooling means will be between the regenerators and the unit 4.
Figure 6 shows the two rotatable structures isolated, for simplicity. There will of course be a connection to one or the other in order to get work out, in the case of an engine, or to put work in, in the case of a pump. The shafts 13 and 17 can be suitably adapted.
It will be understood that while a simple embodiment with three-sided pistons operating in two-lobed chambers has been described, there could be more elaborate arrangements with n+1(n>2) sided pistons in n-lobed chambers connected by a corresponding number of ducts with regenerators. The relative speeds of rotation of the chambers to the pistons will be n+l:n.
m O! O Y J O
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~
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w I~ ~ "' ~ U U U 0 m m m m ~
E E E m E E m i Y s ~e Y Y '~
m i0 ~6 N 4 =
~ U U U U U x y u u u +~
'~I M Y~ ~y ~ M (Il Q V
C U
m 0 > L
m c c c c c c c a m m o m m m L
141 ' i m T mm S m i a t m i 1~ i T m a o 4 _ ~ ~ ~ ~ rc ~ .4 0 c L ++ Cf rA
~ cJ vi C
c .r 67 m C
c c c c c e c c c e ~"' ~' L C
m i m i m T m I 1 m ~ i m i~ T m T m S m C E E
C G ~ C C ~ ~ C LG ~ 41 () C) C
Q
cl v L
u u m C
a a m m 3 m u .. L. 01 > > - ~ - c c c c C ~ W m c9 1G i0 4 C G
m Q. ~7 m 7 A 4 U L L = - ~ u =. a 9 'U
o. o. n. c w w .X id x x x x O C G
m U m C; a E
X C
a1 c:
.r ~ u u .~ d u c e C m m m m E E
93 W ~ ry q A 7 7 7 ~ Y C C ~ C
a, ,C X x x L ~ u O. O. L" L
E R7 iJ (a ~ I.7 tJ :.1 W fJ .Cr td 4i Gr ~r :. L
m ci Gr L
41 i+ y aI
m m m m m C
C c c c c ~
1 = ~0 al iO ia 4 i0 N i0 i0 4 L G' u O. O. O. O. a L L L L Y = ==
[ z x x x x x x x v1 j.+
M kI Sal W kl 41 I11 47 47 W W 4) III
d) ~
c. u a C y 0 .,04 L) L
y1. a Ln o u, 0 m C C
~ O m 0 N 0 tn 0 u+ 0 O M vf a u u ., ri v ~u r- o+ ., .r .~ .r C al C) m = 0 > >
L t!I +~ _ c i0 C Q C", 40 9 L. L.
.,~ uf O ~n o ~ O uf O uf M C d N
N O a O n m rv ~ ~p O 1 cn N X C ~
o e m .. .-= r+ rv n n ~ ~ v L=1 u ~C f0 4S C C
c C
c =-~ 4 I O p u'e O O O O ~ ~ O C
.n rn y a c1 C
= U ->C (L) :J
SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) ~ N N tl N J N N
ro fa ra ro G ~ C. n. G 7 m m kD C u c U O 0 O O ro J C
~ ... .. r-=r '=+ U U
.o w E=
co L
L V7 N N N d N
C a A ro ~o m ro ~a a a n. c. c.
L~ E E E c E E
O tD 0 x c C C 0 0 0 0 0 'H. U ~ U U U U U
~~
In i1 N N N N N N
~ Q, p, ~ a a 3 Y 1 Y Y Y
O E E E E E a n m m ro r0 O 0 0 0 0 L ~ J L :J +J +1 E
w hi 1-1 M M M U
c c c c C c c c C c t rn t m t al t a~ 1 1 0~ 1 t o~ t~ t ~ t rn t a+ i N N CJ N N N N N Ci N
a a a a a c cr a c a 4, U
~
C C C C C C C C C
(D i rn (1) rn N i (U rn t t t t i a+ t a+
="+ v N N N O1 N N N G1 r+ C a c. cc c a a a a JJ L Li L y1 yJ
N a N N G) C1 VI
R'J 7 7 7 Y C C C C C 7 tl N ro m ro ra m m ro r0 m r0 ro U s L a :. c. C a [ ~+ M x x x x c x x x x x x x p a w m w w .+ m c~ w w w ca w U ~
1J Li L
,_ U ' 4'1 Ul N m tIl N ' (--a'~~~1 C C 3 7 C C
C a ra m m m m q ro ~ a rc ra m a c n. C L t L L a a m E o ~ x x x x x x x x c x x x ".4 w m w w w w m w .=. w w w vi v1 a) ~y JJ 3-L L L 41 ~y C) N N fll N U) E Y c c c c C 7 ~ ~ ~
i A ro ra ro ro A a m_ m m_ m i o lo L c a. a n. n. L
U ~ C x x x x x X x x x X
-r 47 w w w 4] L=] w :al w w N C
> 0 -.4 --1 L L y O uf 0 tn 0 vi 0 ui O in O Ln O
a) 0 r0 O% =r tm c Ln r m 0 - r-i -s 4 iJ 1J -i .-1 N N f V (V N (y rl r'1 f'1 f1 LG a a C
ya O
--=~ O Ln O n O u'r O ui O Ln O Ln O
m r'1 r- CV 10 Ul O Q, r'1 (D
r0 ut Ln ~D IO r- n ~ cD a, Om u~ O O
1J ti y O
C
C =-+
0 u O 0 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 O O 0 4.7 R7 ~O Gi .~4 L!) CD - r~ O 1-1 10 CT fV
Un 4..7 rl n ~r ui ui 'n .D J 10 10 0 G.
SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) .~
N Cn ~
1_ C ' XM
M
N m =~ ~j N
~n ... '=1 r, (i~ (I
u v~ E 4 ~~ p, =
V
C o - o -+
+ -4 "
A ~ m m C U
M . i~ m to m m -.r ~ r O + 61 X -4 i+ c,~ u r~ ry N C% C
~ "~ v == 'Q
~n D+ u Ot u -4 0) V C V =.~ eQ
~~ \ c_ \ P o C x' ~
+ ~ m p u , cn 41 o e o 0 ~ t ~ ~ ? w = o~
u m m N X ~o - G1 m O
m 'G 01 ~
8 U a p -. E
0. 0 n ~' 'r C 61 N~ N p m ~p ~ C C
p al , p a y p~ E V o t~ >
Co 0 4p in N p -4 U -4 U u ~p r1 C 4 \ m L
~ = ,., Co V
u c O+
++ 4 m M u ~ 3 A
o u m o o+ -p,' . " m u c m o v v = m a ,~ spi m E
C N t O U ~
I o 7 m 4 O
=-i O. =ri a0" ~~ u r ~ t" C. C p9 T-Z
p tC d + G C) n. _ , m O O
O
U = 1G a + + m K
~n m Ol O
m 7,p c E
N o r '~
atOM O U
n C C + + m ~ p ~ M O t~0 ~ G
ev E E
SUBSTfTUTE SHEET (RULE 26)
y u u ~ E E E m i u O O O OE
y ~O .. .. ~+ U U U U U x .C+
~
V r Y Y Y m m d 1 p q t u u u v L E O' O' O' U x C _ ~ C ~c O
w I~ ~ "' ~ U U U 0 m m m m ~
E E E m E E m i Y s ~e Y Y '~
m i0 ~6 N 4 =
~ U U U U U x y u u u +~
'~I M Y~ ~y ~ M (Il Q V
C U
m 0 > L
m c c c c c c c a m m o m m m L
141 ' i m T mm S m i a t m i 1~ i T m a o 4 _ ~ ~ ~ ~ rc ~ .4 0 c L ++ Cf rA
~ cJ vi C
c .r 67 m C
c c c c c e c c c e ~"' ~' L C
m i m i m T m I 1 m ~ i m i~ T m T m S m C E E
C G ~ C C ~ ~ C LG ~ 41 () C) C
Q
cl v L
u u m C
a a m m 3 m u .. L. 01 > > - ~ - c c c c C ~ W m c9 1G i0 4 C G
m Q. ~7 m 7 A 4 U L L = - ~ u =. a 9 'U
o. o. n. c w w .X id x x x x O C G
m U m C; a E
X C
a1 c:
.r ~ u u .~ d u c e C m m m m E E
93 W ~ ry q A 7 7 7 ~ Y C C ~ C
a, ,C X x x L ~ u O. O. L" L
E R7 iJ (a ~ I.7 tJ :.1 W fJ .Cr td 4i Gr ~r :. L
m ci Gr L
41 i+ y aI
m m m m m C
C c c c c ~
1 = ~0 al iO ia 4 i0 N i0 i0 4 L G' u O. O. O. O. a L L L L Y = ==
[ z x x x x x x x v1 j.+
M kI Sal W kl 41 I11 47 47 W W 4) III
d) ~
c. u a C y 0 .,04 L) L
y1. a Ln o u, 0 m C C
~ O m 0 N 0 tn 0 u+ 0 O M vf a u u ., ri v ~u r- o+ ., .r .~ .r C al C) m = 0 > >
L t!I +~ _ c i0 C Q C", 40 9 L. L.
.,~ uf O ~n o ~ O uf O uf M C d N
N O a O n m rv ~ ~p O 1 cn N X C ~
o e m .. .-= r+ rv n n ~ ~ v L=1 u ~C f0 4S C C
c C
c =-~ 4 I O p u'e O O O O ~ ~ O C
.n rn y a c1 C
= U ->C (L) :J
SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) ~ N N tl N J N N
ro fa ra ro G ~ C. n. G 7 m m kD C u c U O 0 O O ro J C
~ ... .. r-=r '=+ U U
.o w E=
co L
L V7 N N N d N
C a A ro ~o m ro ~a a a n. c. c.
L~ E E E c E E
O tD 0 x c C C 0 0 0 0 0 'H. U ~ U U U U U
~~
In i1 N N N N N N
~ Q, p, ~ a a 3 Y 1 Y Y Y
O E E E E E a n m m ro r0 O 0 0 0 0 L ~ J L :J +J +1 E
w hi 1-1 M M M U
c c c c C c c c C c t rn t m t al t a~ 1 1 0~ 1 t o~ t~ t ~ t rn t a+ i N N CJ N N N N N Ci N
a a a a a c cr a c a 4, U
~
C C C C C C C C C
(D i rn (1) rn N i (U rn t t t t i a+ t a+
="+ v N N N O1 N N N G1 r+ C a c. cc c a a a a JJ L Li L y1 yJ
N a N N G) C1 VI
R'J 7 7 7 Y C C C C C 7 tl N ro m ro ra m m ro r0 m r0 ro U s L a :. c. C a [ ~+ M x x x x c x x x x x x x p a w m w w .+ m c~ w w w ca w U ~
1J Li L
,_ U ' 4'1 Ul N m tIl N ' (--a'~~~1 C C 3 7 C C
C a ra m m m m q ro ~ a rc ra m a c n. C L t L L a a m E o ~ x x x x x x x x c x x x ".4 w m w w w w m w .=. w w w vi v1 a) ~y JJ 3-L L L 41 ~y C) N N fll N U) E Y c c c c C 7 ~ ~ ~
i A ro ra ro ro A a m_ m m_ m i o lo L c a. a n. n. L
U ~ C x x x x x X x x x X
-r 47 w w w 4] L=] w :al w w N C
> 0 -.4 --1 L L y O uf 0 tn 0 vi 0 ui O in O Ln O
a) 0 r0 O% =r tm c Ln r m 0 - r-i -s 4 iJ 1J -i .-1 N N f V (V N (y rl r'1 f'1 f1 LG a a C
ya O
--=~ O Ln O n O u'r O ui O Ln O Ln O
m r'1 r- CV 10 Ul O Q, r'1 (D
r0 ut Ln ~D IO r- n ~ cD a, Om u~ O O
1J ti y O
C
C =-+
0 u O 0 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 O O 0 4.7 R7 ~O Gi .~4 L!) CD - r~ O 1-1 10 CT fV
Un 4..7 rl n ~r ui ui 'n .D J 10 10 0 G.
SUBSTITUTE SHEET (RULE 26) .~
N Cn ~
1_ C ' XM
M
N m =~ ~j N
~n ... '=1 r, (i~ (I
u v~ E 4 ~~ p, =
V
C o - o -+
+ -4 "
A ~ m m C U
M . i~ m to m m -.r ~ r O + 61 X -4 i+ c,~ u r~ ry N C% C
~ "~ v == 'Q
~n D+ u Ot u -4 0) V C V =.~ eQ
~~ \ c_ \ P o C x' ~
+ ~ m p u , cn 41 o e o 0 ~ t ~ ~ ? w = o~
u m m N X ~o - G1 m O
m 'G 01 ~
8 U a p -. E
0. 0 n ~' 'r C 61 N~ N p m ~p ~ C C
p al , p a y p~ E V o t~ >
Co 0 4p in N p -4 U -4 U u ~p r1 C 4 \ m L
~ = ,., Co V
u c O+
++ 4 m M u ~ 3 A
o u m o o+ -p,' . " m u c m o v v = m a ,~ spi m E
C N t O U ~
I o 7 m 4 O
=-i O. =ri a0" ~~ u r ~ t" C. C p9 T-Z
p tC d + G C) n. _ , m O O
O
U = 1G a + + m K
~n m Ol O
m 7,p c E
N o r '~
atOM O U
n C C + + m ~ p ~ M O t~0 ~ G
ev E E
SUBSTfTUTE SHEET (RULE 26)
Claims (6)
1. A fluid or vapour rotary piston machine including two variable-volume units, each unit having a rotary multi-lobed epitrochoidal chamber and a multi-sided rotary piston therein forming a plurality of individual sub-chambers by its co-operation with the periphery of the associated chamber, the number n+1 of piston sides being greater by one than the number n of epitrochoid arcs, wherein the two chambers are constrained to rotate at a first common speed about a first effective common axis while the two pistons are constrained to rotate at a second common speed about a second effective common axis, the ratio of first to second common speeds being n+1:n, wherein each chamber has a plurality n of dual-function ports enabling connection between the chambers via ducts, and wherein said ducts each contain a regenerator, enabling one variable-volume unit to perform intake, expansion and exhaust, while the other unit performs intake, compression and exhaust, as a result of the relative rotation and port positions.
2. A rotary piston machine as claimed in claim 1, wherein heating means are provided for the variable-volume unit which performs the expansion processes.
3. A rotary piston machine as claimed in claim 2, wherein further heating means are provided between each said regenerator and the variable-volume unit which performs the expansion processes.
4. A rotary piston machine as claimed in any one of claims 1, 2 or 3, wherein cooling means are provided for the variable-volume unit which performs the compression processes.
5. A rotary piston machine as claimed in claim 4, wherein further cooling means are provided between each said regenerator and the variable-volume unit which performs the compression processes.
6. A rotary piston machine as claimed in any one of the claims 1 to 5, wherein n=2.
Applications Claiming Priority (3)
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GBGB9808780.2A GB9808780D0 (en) | 1998-04-25 | 1998-04-25 | Improvements relating to rotary piston machines |
GB9808780.2 | 1998-04-25 | ||
PCT/GB1999/001290 WO1999056013A1 (en) | 1998-04-25 | 1999-04-26 | Improvements relating to rotary piston machines |
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CA2367056A1 CA2367056A1 (en) | 1999-11-04 |
CA2367056C true CA2367056C (en) | 2008-02-19 |
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US (1) | US6352063B1 (en) |
EP (1) | EP1075595B1 (en) |
JP (1) | JP4249904B2 (en) |
KR (1) | KR100624550B1 (en) |
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AT (1) | ATE259467T1 (en) |
AU (1) | AU756743B2 (en) |
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CA (1) | CA2367056C (en) |
DE (1) | DE69914738T2 (en) |
GB (1) | GB9808780D0 (en) |
IN (1) | IN2000KN00533A (en) |
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CA2545519C (en) * | 2005-05-02 | 2009-12-08 | John Alexander Herring | Hybrid engine |
WO2007079421A2 (en) * | 2005-12-30 | 2007-07-12 | Gale Richard A | A stirling engine having a rotary power piston in a chamber that rotates with the output drive |
JP4904560B2 (en) * | 2006-10-13 | 2012-03-28 | 邦夫 松本 | Rotary Stirling engine |
EP2132411A4 (en) * | 2007-04-09 | 2014-11-05 | Seth Chandan Kumar | Split cycle variable capacity rotary spark ignition engine |
US8689764B2 (en) * | 2008-10-08 | 2014-04-08 | Aerojet Rocketdyne Of De, Inc. | Rotary engine with exhaust gas supplemental compounding |
WO2011043773A1 (en) * | 2009-10-08 | 2011-04-14 | Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne, Inc. | Supplemental compounding control valve for rotary engine |
JP4917686B1 (en) * | 2011-07-01 | 2012-04-18 | 泰朗 横山 | Rotary Stirling engine |
KR102029469B1 (en) * | 2012-02-17 | 2019-10-07 | 삼성전기주식회사 | Multilayered ceramic electronic component and fabricating method thereof |
DE102013101216B4 (en) * | 2013-02-07 | 2015-06-03 | En3 Gmbh | Process for the direct conversion of steam energy into pressurized energy to a pumped medium and arrangement for carrying out the process |
JP2015212539A (en) * | 2014-05-06 | 2015-11-26 | 俊之 坂本 | Stirling engine |
EP3101257A1 (en) | 2015-06-03 | 2016-12-07 | EN3 GmbH | Heat transfer unit and methods for performing thermodynamic cycles by means of a heat transfer unit |
CN105756715B (en) * | 2015-12-02 | 2018-11-23 | 刘克均 | High energy air power rotor engine assembly |
CN107524544A (en) * | 2016-06-15 | 2017-12-29 | 罗天珍 | Liang Shi season difference rotor external-combustion engines |
DE102020106685B3 (en) | 2020-03-11 | 2021-07-08 | Borgwarner Inc. | Rotary piston compressor and system for temperature conditioning with rotary piston compressor |
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Family Cites Families (8)
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---|---|---|---|---|
DE2016218A1 (en) | 1970-04-04 | 1971-10-21 | Daimler-Benz AG, 7000 Stuttgart Untertürkheim | Hot gas rotary piston machine |
US3744940A (en) * | 1971-12-16 | 1973-07-10 | Curtiss Wright Corp | Rotary expansion engine of the wankel type |
DE3337518A1 (en) * | 1982-10-15 | 1984-04-26 | Toyo Kogyo Co. Ltd., Hiroshima | INLET SYSTEM FOR ROTARY PISTON ENGINES |
US4463718A (en) * | 1982-11-01 | 1984-08-07 | Deere & Company | Lubricant metering system for rotary internal combustion engine |
JPS59218334A (en) * | 1983-05-25 | 1984-12-08 | Mazda Motor Corp | Suction device of rotary piston engine |
US5251596A (en) * | 1990-12-31 | 1993-10-12 | Westland Martin W | Two stroke rotary internal combustion engine |
US5410998A (en) * | 1991-05-21 | 1995-05-02 | Paul; Marius A. | Continuous external heat engine |
US5310325A (en) * | 1993-03-30 | 1994-05-10 | Gulyash Steve I | Rotary engine with eccentric gearing |
-
1998
- 1998-04-25 GB GBGB9808780.2A patent/GB9808780D0/en not_active Ceased
-
1999
- 1999-04-26 KR KR1020007011853A patent/KR100624550B1/en not_active IP Right Cessation
- 1999-04-26 CA CA002367056A patent/CA2367056C/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 1999-04-26 US US09/673,975 patent/US6352063B1/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 1999-04-26 DE DE69914738T patent/DE69914738T2/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1999-04-26 CN CN99807865A patent/CN1113163C/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 1999-04-26 WO PCT/GB1999/001290 patent/WO1999056013A1/en active IP Right Grant
- 1999-04-26 BR BR9909924-1A patent/BR9909924A/en not_active IP Right Cessation
- 1999-04-26 AU AU37178/99A patent/AU756743B2/en not_active Ceased
- 1999-04-26 IN IN533KON2000 patent/IN2000KN00533A/en unknown
- 1999-04-26 PL PL343676A patent/PL198217B1/en not_active IP Right Cessation
- 1999-04-26 AT AT99919376T patent/ATE259467T1/en not_active IP Right Cessation
- 1999-04-26 EP EP99919376A patent/EP1075595B1/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1999-04-26 JP JP2000546140A patent/JP4249904B2/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
JP4249904B2 (en) | 2009-04-08 |
JP2002513114A (en) | 2002-05-08 |
DE69914738D1 (en) | 2004-03-18 |
WO1999056013A1 (en) | 1999-11-04 |
GB9808780D0 (en) | 1998-06-24 |
AU3717899A (en) | 1999-11-16 |
KR100624550B1 (en) | 2006-09-18 |
PL343676A1 (en) | 2001-08-27 |
BR9909924A (en) | 2002-09-24 |
AU756743B2 (en) | 2003-01-23 |
PL198217B1 (en) | 2008-06-30 |
IN2000KN00533A (en) | 2015-08-28 |
ATE259467T1 (en) | 2004-02-15 |
EP1075595A1 (en) | 2001-02-14 |
EP1075595B1 (en) | 2004-02-11 |
CN1307666A (en) | 2001-08-08 |
DE69914738T2 (en) | 2005-01-20 |
CA2367056A1 (en) | 1999-11-04 |
CN1113163C (en) | 2003-07-02 |
US6352063B1 (en) | 2002-03-05 |
KR20010071176A (en) | 2001-07-28 |
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Legal Events
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EEER | Examination request | ||
MKLA | Lapsed |